Online retail giant Amazon.com will pick Wilson and Rutherford counties as the sites for permanent facilities in Middle Tennessee, multiple sources have told the Nashville Business Journal.

The company plans to have a million-square-foot “sort facility” built in Murfreesboro off Joe B. Jackson Boulevard that could create up to 1,100 jobs and bring a capital investment of $87.5 million. The facility is projected to create $47.6 million in tax revenue from construction and operation over 20 years, according to an analysis presented to the Rutherford Chamber of Commerce.

The other facility is to be built in Lebanon across from Amazon’s temporary distribution center near Interstate 840. It will house a portion of the company’s non-sorting operations and create potentially 450 full-time jobs. The capital investment of the Lebanon facility is estimated to be $51.5 million, with total projected tax revenue of $15.5 million over 15 years, according to an independent analysis.

Amazon officials are in town negotiating the deals, which could be finalized as early as next week, according to a source familiar with the situation.

A non-local developer is expected to purchase the sites, build the facilities and then lease them back to Amazon.com.

In August, the Rutherford Chamber of Commerce made a presentation detailing the estimated investment and tax revenue figures to Rutherford’s Industrial Development Board. At that time, officials did not know who the interested company was because Amazon was still using the code name “Project Tango.”

The IDB voted then to give the still anonymous company a 20-year tax break on personal and real property taxes totaling $15.8 million for a proposed sort facility.

Wilson County, also without knowing the courting company, approved an incentive deal in hopes it would give the locality a competitive advantage in the process.

All signs indicate it did exactly that.

The news means that Amazon’s total Tennessee investment will hover around $350 million, creating thousands of jobs while maintaining previously announced projects in Hamilton and Bradley counties. The investments could total up to 3,500 full time jobs for Middle Tennessee’s rural communities.

The deals come on the heels of Thursday’s announcement by Gov. Bill Haslam that Amazon would not collect sales taxes for two years while advocates attempt to get nationwide legislation passed addressing the collection of online sales taxes.

That confirmation signaled the resolution of an ongoing and highly politicized dispute.

At issue has been whether Amazon would have to collect sales taxes in Tennessee. The online retailer has said its planned locations in Tennessee and other states are not sales operations requiring tax collection. But brick-and-mortar retailers have complained that it’s not fair they have to collect sales taxes when online retailers with locations in the state do not. Tennessee Attorney General Bob Cooper recently said that Amazon's presence would trigger sales tax requirements.